textabstractIntergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow group members against the threat of out-group aggression, including the tendency to pre-empt out-group threat through a competitive approach. Here we link such defense-motivated competition to oxytocin, a hypothalamic neuropeptide involved in reproduction and social bonding. An intergroup conflict game was developed to disentangle whether oxytocin motivates competitive approach to protect (i) immediate self-interest, (ii) vulnerable in-group members, or (iii) both. Males self-administered oxytocin or placebo (double-blind placebo-controlled) and made decisions with financial consequences to themselves, their fellow in-group members, a...
Human cooperation and competition is modulated by oxytocin, a hypothalamic neuropeptide that functio...
Collective decision making often benefits both the individuals and the group in a variety of context...
Collective decision making often benefits both the individuals and the group in a variety of context...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Humans regulate intergroup conflict through parochial altruism; they self-sacrifice to contribute to...
A contribution to a special issue on Hormones and Human Competition. In intergroup settings, individ...
In humans, oxytocin promotes cognitive and motivational tendencies that benefit the groups on which ...
Inter-group conflicts drive human discrimination, mass migration, and violence, but their psychobiol...
Humans live in, rely on, and contribute to groups. Evolution may have biologically prepared them to ...
Human ethnocentrism—the tendency to view one's group as centrally important and superior to other gr...
Intergroup conflict contributes to human discrimination and violence, but persists because individua...
<p>(<b>A</b>). Under low personal vulnerability, oxytocin produces more non-cooperation than placebo...
Human cooperation and competition is modulated by oxytocin, a hypothalamic neuropeptide that functio...
Collective decision making often benefits both the individuals and the group in a variety of context...
Collective decision making often benefits both the individuals and the group in a variety of context...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual's motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Intergroup conflict is often driven by an individual’s motivation to protect oneself and fellow grou...
Humans regulate intergroup conflict through parochial altruism; they self-sacrifice to contribute to...
A contribution to a special issue on Hormones and Human Competition. In intergroup settings, individ...
In humans, oxytocin promotes cognitive and motivational tendencies that benefit the groups on which ...
Inter-group conflicts drive human discrimination, mass migration, and violence, but their psychobiol...
Humans live in, rely on, and contribute to groups. Evolution may have biologically prepared them to ...
Human ethnocentrism—the tendency to view one's group as centrally important and superior to other gr...
Intergroup conflict contributes to human discrimination and violence, but persists because individua...
<p>(<b>A</b>). Under low personal vulnerability, oxytocin produces more non-cooperation than placebo...
Human cooperation and competition is modulated by oxytocin, a hypothalamic neuropeptide that functio...
Collective decision making often benefits both the individuals and the group in a variety of context...
Collective decision making often benefits both the individuals and the group in a variety of context...